The following table or figure may be downloaded to PowerPoint for personal use in teaching and presentations. This feature is available to all subscribers to the journal.

You MUST read and follow the guidelines at Request to Reproduce AJR Content if you are distributing or using AJR content beyond academic use (limited distribution, non-revenue producing, or educational purposes).

(Downloading may take up to 30 seconds.
If the slide opens in your browser, select File -> Save As to save it.)

Click on image to view larger version.


Figure 9


Fig. 5 35-year-old man with hemangioma. See also Figure S5, cine loop, in supplemental data online. Maximum-intensity-projection (MIP) image shows rapidly perfused lesion. MIP image obtained 9.4 seconds after onset of arterial phase enhancement shows puddles of contrast material around periphery of lesion. Fine-vessel detail is evident in surrounding normal liver. If hemangioma is extremely slowly perfused, MIP technique may not depict vascularization within single breath-hold.